CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC
Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/1366363
CityViewNC.com | 13 Call to speak with a LIVE & local person 910.483.1196 Serving Central and SE North Carolina with offices in Fayetteville & Wilmington. HolmesSecurity.net #TheresNoPlaceLikeHolmes PEACE OF MIND, WHEREVER YOU ARE Residential & Commercial Security Solutions With On The Go Monitoring EXPLORE VIBE been repeated. When marching band lost its luster, we made a deal that he could trade out if he put the time into his Eagle Scout quest. He achieved it a few days prior to his 18th birthday. During the frustration of the COVID shutdown, he showed up on the docks of Strickland's Portion Pak on Sapona Road and put in an application. ey pay him an hourly wage, and he works about 20 hours a week. I guess I am glad they did not call me before hiring him, because I would have paid them to take him, if only to get him out of the house and out from in front of the computer. His foray into the working world has been indescribably productive. It has provided interaction with people he would not have known otherwise. It has required him to be timely. To work weekends. To make deductively reasoned decisions on the merits of working hard. A few days into his job, he came home saying he had pulled cases of crinkle-cut fries from the freezer every day he had worked. "Dad, where do all those potatoes come from?" So, he has witnessed visual examples of the macroeconomics of farming and distribution. He will leave for Raleigh this August. He will be wearing red, joining the Wolfpack. As Susanna and I look at it today, we are elated for him. When he is actually gone, when we are driving away from his dorm in a few months, we will be elated still. We will also be returning to a house occupied by just us two – an empty nest. In the think tank that is my shower, it occurred to me last week that when Hoose graduates from high school May 28th and begins packing for life away from home, I will have accomplished the bulk of what I vowed to do when Susie and I contracted with each other for a family. ere is so much more that I want to say to all my children and even to their children. But at 60 years of age and being about three-fourths done on the actuarial charts, I have knocked out the bulk of the hard work. I am self-satisfied. I do hope that when we drive into the garage aer setting him on his path that I can slip down to the pole barn and entice the invaders into at least one more friendly battle. I will wish, though, that I too had my liege battling them by my side. Bill McFadeyen can be reached at propertybill@nc.rr.com.